1986
DOI: 10.3758/bf03204936
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Determinants of measured olfactory sensitivity

Abstract: Ten participants sought to detect four odorants: benzaldehyde, pyridine, and two alcohols, n-butyl and n-amyl alcohol, that smelled similar to each other. These were presented repeatedly on 3 successive days. The sequence of testing during a session made it possible to determine whether experience with one odorant would specifically facilitate the detectability of a similar-smelling odorant and whether any such facilitation would restrict itself to the nostril through which the experience was gained. Neither o… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…For Punter's three different assessments of butanol (the odorant used in the present study), they translate to 50/1, 750/1, and 10,000/1. Numbers on this order turn up routinely (see, e.g., Brown, & Robinette, 1968;Jones, 1957;Rabin & Cain, 1986;Yoshida, 1984). To explain (1) why intersubject variability itself varies so much across compounds, and (2) why it is so high compared with other sense modalities constitutes two major challenges to the student of olfaction .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For Punter's three different assessments of butanol (the odorant used in the present study), they translate to 50/1, 750/1, and 10,000/1. Numbers on this order turn up routinely (see, e.g., Brown, & Robinette, 1968;Jones, 1957;Rabin & Cain, 1986;Yoshida, 1984). To explain (1) why intersubject variability itself varies so much across compounds, and (2) why it is so high compared with other sense modalities constitutes two major challenges to the student of olfaction .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the average of several short tests may yield a more stable impression of individual sensitivity and furnish a reliable index of individual olfactory aging. Rabin and Cain (1986) and Cain and Gent (1991) advocated frequent testing over time, arguing that the usual brief tests overestimate individual differences. Rabin and Cain's conclusion that "high person-to-person variability in olfactory sensitivity may be largely an illusion" (p. 284) foreshadows the present study.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some results indicate that interindividual variability can differ vastly among compounds, depending on chemical structure (Punter PH, 1983;Stevens JC, Cain WS, 1987). Other results favor a picture of general (rather than odorant-specific) and small (1 to 2 orders of magnitude) interindividual differences in sensitivity (Rabin MD, Cain WS, 1986). It is clear that a high enough amount of data per person is necessary in order to avoid an artificially high interindividual variability (Stevens JC et al, 1988).…”
Section: Interindividual Variabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Each of the 4 compounds served as X in 8 pairs per session, yielding 32 pairs that were presented in a random sequence for each subject. The stimulus pairs were presented at least 1 minute apart, sufficient time to re-establish vapor concentration in the head space [57]. Table 1 shows the adapt-test pairs for adaptation sessions in which subjects sniffed adapt items and then immediately sniffed and identified the odors of test items.…”
Section: Experimental Designmentioning
confidence: 99%